Bloomington Telephone, Volume 7, Number 33, Bloomington, Monroe County, 28 December 1883 — Page 7
V. ' 1 4
"V
v
, Billing a oonversatkm with one of the
, .vriter8 on the National Republican, an old New York journalist girea the following breezy story of how Greeley was killed and WMtelaw Beid elected to the position of editor and almost sole proprietor of the New York Tribune: "Some time after the war Whitelaw ' Beid was looking around for a good opening. He was oae of those lucky war correspondents who were required by the War Department r some other ruling martial authority to attach a . nsnm Aa nlrmiA In sWATO-tliinc thtW sent
, - MVMa w . v w -V-J - 5"
I aw men juuumu uwa uis gave to their -work a personality and i 1- T 4.V nn- Tina force that would not otherwise have at tached to it, and when the war was over Mack, Beid and a few others were well known. Horace Greeley had seen some of Whitelaw Beid's work, and liked it. He gave the young man a situation on the Tribune. It was one one of those -unsettled positions one goiretimes strikes on a newspaper, and Beid was discontented. The salary was only $50 a week, and he saw no immediate prospects of advancement. One day he went over to see John Swinton, now chief of staff on the Sun, who was then wMfg"g editor of the Times, and asked him for a job, telling him he was not getting enough to enable him to lire as he wanted to live, and as he thought he ought to live. There was uo place open on the Times just then, but' Swinton. promised to give him a show the first opportunity that was presented. Hot long afterward he wrote Beid offering him work, but the latter called to say. that he had been promoted and his salary increased, and that he believed he would not change. He had been promoted to dp scrub editonal, as the light paragraph work was called. v
At tnis period Joan ivnsseu xoxmg was managing editor of the Tribune, and Amos Cummings city editor. Young was conceded to be one of the very best newspaper men of America, and his prospects were brilliant. Now comes the queer incident that upset everything and caused a general shaking up. . "John Russell Young sent a messenger to Amos Cummings one day with a i note giving instructions about some assignment of work At the moment the boy gave the note to Cummings the lat- ' ter was telling a tramp printer, who was importuning him for a dollar, that he would not give him anything. "'Now, Amos, just gimme a dollar this time, won't yer? pleaded the banner-carrier. '
- Til be if I will,' responded the - irascible Cummings. "The messenger waited to hear no more. He flew back to Young and breathlessly told him Cummings had N taken his note and then- said he would be if .would dQ it.' "Without waiting to make inquiries, Young wrote a note to Cumminhs,- discharging him peremotorily. - The beheaded city editor tried to see the manager and get an explanation, but Young would not give him a hearing, and sent the curt message : 'You are discharged for insubordination and ' profanity.7 "Years before this Cummings had saved Bobert Bonner from heavy loss by fire, and the. Ledger editor do. that occasion had told the young man to call on him if he ever wanted a favor. Cummings gave him a.call and reminded him of the circumstance. , 'What can I do for you?' .asked Bonner. " 'You an give me a letter to Charles A. Dana. I want a position oa the T. 1 11... rn.no
wJTVfVU JJtJmfm WOO UiQ TCI J AifcU est obligations to Bonner, who had advanced him money to pay for his stock in the Sun. Armed with a friendly note from .Bonner, Cummings called on Dana. It se happened .that tiiey were making.smechanges in the force at that juncture, England, the managing .editor, havptng been put in charge of .ie business office, and other men nwred about. "What did you leave the Tribune for, Amos, ?' asked Daaa. " 'I was tfischarged for alleged immtoordination and profanity,' was the se"'I thak you are just the man 1 N want for managing editor,' said Dana, and Amos waas forwith installed in that position. A few weeks afterward the Sun published a full-paged sensation Charging John Bussell Young with stealing Associated Press dispatches an?, sending them i a Philadelphia paper Young lost hi place, lost caste, and lost prestige. Two or three years afterward Cummings met him on the street and greeted himwihi' 'Weft, you, you discharged me for insurbordination and profanity, and I discharged you for stealing. Honors are easy. Good
"Jim Bennett, however, liked Young, and gave him a roving commission on the Herald at $100 a week and expenses. 'He reported for the Herald front Paris for several years, then went around the world with Grant for a year . and wrote a big book about it, then eet- . tied down in the Herald as an editorial writer a $$.j$P $ year, j imti flxnyagk Grant's - influence, aided by. Jus Jourhalthe Celestial Kingdom, where be now is.
V." . ..vBeja as todvanoed to
"Xffc ji chair, and wheir&orace Greeley temporarily retired from the control of the paper to run for President, Beid was put in charge at $100 per week. It is generally supposed that Greeley died because he failed of elec tion. . That is a mistake. He died of a' broken, heart because he thought that while he had been out he had been un dermiued by the man whom he had ele rated. His editorials would not be published, and when he would protest he found he was without a voice. He also discovered that the circulation of the weekly had dropped from 150,000 to 30,000, and the daily "from 50,000 to next to nothing. All these causes combined to break the old man's mind and kill him. No jury would say that he was murdered; but I have heard things said by those who were in a position to know how he was treated after that unfortunate campaign. "If John Bussell Young had not penned that hasty note to Amos Cummings discharging him, it is altogether probable that in the natural course of events he would have succeeded Greeley and been the owner of the Tribune to-day instead of Whitelaw Beid, and that the latter would still be holding a subordinate, no-account sort of a place on one of the New York dailies, or perhaps Greeley might never have been persuaded against his better judgment to become a candidate for President. That rattle-pated, tale-bearing messenger boy did more mischief in sixty secojtftfs than a thousand men could undo in twenty years. One move of the most insignificant pawn on the board completely changed the result of the game." SOME WEALTHY HEW YORK WOMEN. New York millionaires are very well known. The Yanderbilts, the Astors, Goulds, Rockefellers, etc., have been written up so often that they are known from one end of the land to the other. But the men are not the only ones to be classed m tne list of those who have their millions of dollars. There are lots of women in New York who axe entitled to a place in the list. For instance, there is Mrs. A. T. Stewart, widow of the famous merchant prince, who, when he died, left her over $100,000,0001 This fortune has not been squandered, but by judicious investment has been greatly augmented. Mrs. Stewart is now an old, feeble woman, and lives a very quiet life in a single suite of rooms in her great man sion .of Fifth avenue and Twenty fourth street Mrs. Susan E. Roberts has the care of nobody knows hew many millions, her brown stone . residence on Fifth avenue alone being assessed at $175,000. Commodore Vanderbilt's relict is, of course, immensely wealthy, Its is also Mrs. J. C. Ayer, widow" of the patent .medicine man. Among other ladies who' are the happy or unhappy, as the case may be, possessors of dollars that amount up into the millions, are Miss Mary G. Pickney, who owns vast tracts of unimproved real estate, Miss Carrie Astor, who is wealthy in her. own right, Mrs. Catherine Lord, Mrs. Hick Lord and Miss Catherine Wolfe, who puts a figure eight before her millions. Miss Wolfe is .a very charitable lady, giving annually a great deal of money to various charities in a quiet, unassuming way. Her brown stone front on the avenue has within its walls -old tapestry, bric-a-bric and curiosities which she has picked up in Europe, valued at over $100,000. New York letter. COURTSHIP EXTHA ORDINARY. The following extract from the life of the wife of William the Conqueror is exceedingly curitnzs, as characteristic of the manners of a semi-civilized age and nation: "After some years' delay, William, appears to have become desperate, and, if we may trust to the evidence of thl chronicle of Ingerbe, in the'year 1047, waylaid Matilda in the streets of Bruges, as she was returning from mass, seized her, rolled her in the dirt, spoiled her rich array, and, not content with these outrages, struck her repeatedly and rode off .at ful speed. . . "This brought the affair to a crisis,for Matilda, either convinced of the strength of William' passion, or .afraid of encountering- another beating, consented to become his wife. "How he ever presumed to enter her presence again, after such a series of enormities, the chronicler sayeth not, and we are at a loss to imagine." In England there are every year in June 3,600,000 cows and heifers in milk or calf, and about 160,000 families are concerned in the industry. If each of these cows gives 450 gallons of milk & year, at 6d. a gallon the sum will amount to over forty millions sterling. Boston claims the inventor of a barrel hoop-making machine. According to a Massachusetts exchange this machine can turn oat from 20,000 to 30,000 half-round hoops a day, cutting two three or four' from a pole, as occasion requiresi .- . ,He serves his county best who don't steal everything he gets his hands on while in office.
ts$ language of tub future, All languages have been expanded and enriched by slang, and it would not be too much to say that all figurative speech consists either of authorized or ef unauthorized slang. The verb "to monkey," which is only a year or two old, and is as jet pure slang, is evidently to become in course of time a legitimate expression. Its primary meaning is to busy one's self in ways other than utilitarian. The amateur painter or musician "monkeys" with art, and the political theorist who invents impracticable reforms may bo said to "monkey" with politics. The verb is occasionally used as a synonym for the expression "to busy one's self" with anything, but it cannot legitimately be used of honest, useful work, except when such work is either badly done or is undertaken as a recreation rather than as a legitimate business. Who invented the verb "to monkey" will probably never be known, but the inventor "monkeyed" with the English language better than he knew. The word is so full of meaning, and differs by such delicate and subtle shades from the legitimate words most closely
related t it in meaning, that it wil win its place in the ranks of grave- and regular language. Already it has ascended from the sidewalk and is met with growing-frequency though as yet clad in quotation marks in the columns of newspapers. Our descendants will use it without a thought of impropriety. A still more recent example of slang is the ironical request of the street boy to a conceited and boastful opponent to "come off the roof." The request needs no explanation. It is vivid and picturesque. The world is full of men who might properly be requested to "come off the roof." There is a field of study offered to the philologist in current slang which is worth cultivation. The slang of the street is to a large extent the language of the future. It is the survival of -the fittest of slang words and expressions that makes language. The pliilologist who will lay aside his dignity, "come off the roof," and "monkey" with slang will find himself abundantly repaid. New York Times. EXECUTIONS IN XN GLAND. A table compiled by the directors .of convict prisons presents some curious facts regarding the history of sentences of death in England and Wales during the last fifty years. It appears that even as late as 1833, when the table commences, so common was it to pass death sentences not of the gravest kind that of 931 such sentences in that year only nine were for actual murder. Death sentences must, however, clearly have lost their peculiar terrors, for out of these 931 condemnations, with all their attendant solemnities of the black cap and the Judge's exhortation, the extreme penalty was really carried out only in thirty-three cases. The last year in which sentence of death was passed for a crime short of murder was 1874, when there was one instance only. With this exception there has been no such case since 1862. The enormous disproportion between sentences and executions has long since disappeared; but the chances of a capital sentence being carried out appear to be still in favor of the condemned. Thus in the four years 187-9-82 there have been 107 condemnations, whereas the executions have been fifty-one only. London Dally News. INDIAN J?l GUTINQ. John Finertyhas stepped from reportorial ranks to a seat in the Congress of the United States. This is the man who, when with Gen. Crook on an Indian campaign as a correspondent of the -Chicago Times, borrowed a carbine and went upon he skirmish line. "Why- didn't you go to the rear during ithe fighting?" inquired an officer when the camp was made at night. "Didn't ye tell me the front was the rare in Indian foightlng, blast your sowl ?" exclaimed the amateur soldier. American Journalist. A Voice ftjom the Jiorthwest. I&lwaukee, Wis. The Daily Sentinel, which is the leading morning paper of this Stats, writes: "St. Jacobs Oil, the wonderful remedy for rheumatism, has been used by a large number of people in -this city, and with effect truly marvelous." AN OBSER VING1eMJPjLOXBR. "Yku are getting to be a regular to, per a perfect sot, sir," said an irate businessman of Austin to one of, his clerks, "don't you suppose that I can see that you have been drinking again ?" "Of course I suppose so,f' answered the employe. "Yon always see when I am drhaking, but the deuce of it is you never see when I am dry." Texas Siftings. A Valuable Medical Treatise. Tie edition for 1884 of the sterling Medical Annual, known an Hostetter's Almanac, Ik now ready, and may be obtained, free of cost, of druggists and general country dealers in all parts of the United States, Mexico, and indeed in every civilized portion of the Western Hemisphere. This Almanac has been issued regularly at the commencement of every year for over one-filth of century. It combines, with the soundest practical advice for the preservation and restoration of health, a large amount of interesting and arausi'ujr light reading, and the calendar, astuonomical calculations, chronological items, tfcb., are prepared with great care, and will be found entirely aocimate. The Issue of Hostetter's Almanac for 1881 will probably be the largest edition of a medlenj work ever published in any country, !he proprietors, Messrs. Hostetter & Smith, Pittsburgh, Pa., on receipt of a 2 cent stamp, will forward! a ropy by mail to any Mwuprlw isanuofeprocw am to his neighborhctod.
A TEfiRIBLE PROPHECY. The Red Sunsets, Cyclones and Earthquakes Foretelling; Coming lMsaster How to Sleet It. The recent mysterious appearances following snusot and preceding- sunrise havo attracted wide Attention from students ot the skies and the people generally. Duiie the days of recent weekj.be suu seems o have been ol a -urod bjr a thin veil, of a dull, leaden hue, v. nfch, as" the sun roceded toward the horizon, became more luminous, then yollow, then orange, thou red; and, of night settled down upon the earth, a dull purple. At first it was thought these appearances were ordinary sunset reflections of light; but it Is now pretty certain that they are either t: e misty substance of the tatt of j-oaio unseen comet, in which the earth is enveloped, or a surrounding stratum world dust, o . very small meteors. Prof. Brooks, of tne Hod House Observatory, Pholps, N. Y., has turned his telescopo upon these objects, and discoveiel waat bo thinks are myriads of telescopic meteors. If it is unorganized world dust, or decomposed vapors, as the Dcmwat and Chroni:ie, of Kochciter, N. Y., remarks: "How is this matter to bo disposed of? Will it settle and form a deposit upon the .earth, or remain a partial opaque shell about the earth, to out off a jo.-t:ou of the sun's light upon itt" Whatever the mystery is, there is no denying that some very strange forces are at work in the upper airs. The terrible tornadoes and evclones which have swept onr
country, and the fearful volcauoes and earthquakes which have destroj-ed so many cities and thousands' of people the tidal waves which mysteriously rise and fall on coasts hitherto unvexed by them the tremendous activity which is evident in the sun by the constant revelation of enormous spots upon its surface all indicate unusual energy in the heavenly bodies. These circumstances recall Prof. Grimmer's prophecies, that froih M81 to 1887 the passage of the Ave great planets Mars, Neptune, Jupiter, Uranus and Saturn around the sun would produce strange and wonderful phenomena. He says: "The waters of the earth will become more or less poisonous. The air will be foul with noisome odors. Ancient raeej will disappear from the earth." Ho attempts to prove his prophecy by the fact that in 1720, when Mars and Saturn made their passage around the sun coincidentally, great destruction and mortality visited all parts of the globe. He also found the same results in previous perihelion passages of the planets, and argues that these circumstances always produce epidemics and destructive diseases which will baffle the skill of the most eminent physicians; that the poor will die by thousands, the weak and intemperato fallin? first, those whose blood has been impoverished by excess of work or dissipation next, and only those who are in comparative vigor 6ball escape to enjoy the era of renewed activity and prosperity which will follow the period of destruction. Inasmuch as the entire world seams subject to the sway of the heavenly bodies no part of the earth, he thinks, can escape scourging. He oven predicts that America will lose over 10.000.0CO of people; that farmers will be stricken with fear and cease to tJU the soil; that famine will make human misery more wretched. That hundreds will flee to overcrowded cities for aid in vain. That sudden changes in 'ocean currents, temperature and surroundings will entirely transform the face of nature and climate of countries; that the air will be so foul with malaria and oiher noxious gaes, that those who survive will be troubled with disorders of the digestive organs. That many who escape other ills will bloat with dropsy and suddenly pass away, while others will grow thin and drag out a miserable existence in indescribable agony for weeks. Neuralgic pains in different parts of tho bedy will torment them. They will easily tire and become despondent. A faint, hot feeling will bo succeeded by chilly sensations, while hallucinations and dread of impending ill will paralyze all effort, "The birds in the air, the beasts of tho tleid and'even the fish of the sea will become diseased, poisoning the air and poisoning the watersof the globe." We are told on the other hand fiiat those who shall pass through this period of trial will have larger enjoyment of life and health. The earth wlU yield more abundantly than ever bsrore.' The animal kingdom will be more prolific and life prolonged very materially. This prolongation of life will be owing to the healthy electric and magnetic, influences that will pervade the atmosphere. It would, perhaps, seem that the present redness ol the sun, and the presence of a belt or veil of cosmic matter, justified, in a measure, the prediction of Prof. Grimmer, but disturbing as hfs prediction may be we are told for our comfort lhat the strong and pure-blooded need have little to fear in theo ealamities, that those who are delicate or Indisposed should adopt means to keep the system well supported and the blood pure and that the most philosophical and effective method of ae oinplishing this is to keep the kidney and liver in good eondit'on. Flora, the teitimo nials of such men as Dr. Bio Lewis and Prof. It. A. Gunn, M. D., Dean of the United States Medical college. New York, arid thousands of influential non-professional pjople, it seems almost ce.tain that for this purpose there is no preparation known tos ience equal to Warner's Safe Cure, better known as Warner's Safe Kidney and Liver Cure. This medicine has acquired the finest reputation of anv preparation that was ever put upon tho market. It is a radical blood purifier, whi b soothes and heals all in 'a.ned organs, strengthens the nervosa system, washes out all evidences of decay, regulates digestion, prevents malassimilation of food in a philosophical and rat'onal manner, fortifies tho eycm against climatic changes and malarial influent es and the destructive agencies which seem to be fo abundant in these uevil days." It is not our purpose to dispute the correctness of Prof. Grimmer's prophecies. As wo havo said, the marked disturoances of the past few ycara would seem to give a semblance of verification of bis theory. It is .certain, as above stated, that we are passing through what may be regarded s a crucial period and it is the part of wise men not to ignore, but to learn to fortdiy themselves against the possibility of being overcome by these evils. It is a duty waich each man owes to himseli',aiid his fellows, to mitigate ;asmuch asDOSSililethesufforiugof humanity; .and in noway better can be accomplish this purpose than to see to it that ho, himsou, is fortified by the best known preparation In tfho strongest possible manner, ovd that he exert the influence of his own ox ample upon his lellows to the end that they, too, may share with him immunity from the destructive ftalluciici'S which seek his rum. Thkiik is not always honor ambng thieves. A society reporter is something of a pirate ihimsoll'; yet he f rcqueatly attacks private ears. roe Jiiotje. There is talk of lynching tho man who evolved this toast: " Oar flre-engiues, may they be like old maids ever ready, but never wanted." . Mr. OiiivKK Mvf.up, of Ironton, O., says: "Samaritan Aeiuine cured me of general debility." Emerson said : " There is always room for a man of force." He had probably met Sullivan in a crowd. Kindcrhook Note. "It quiets the patient and ultimately cures him,"' A late encomium on Samaritan Nervine. "I am the power behind the throne," soliloquized the mule, as he pitched his rider heels over bead to the ground. Fulton Times. The Best to the World. Dr. J- W. Hamilton, of Merrlllan, Wis., says: I have said Warner's White Wine Tat Syrup for years. It is the best cough medicine in tho world and has no equal for asthma. From Col. C. H. Mackey, Thirty-second Iowa Infantry: I have derived more benfite from Ely's Cream Balm than anything else I i.ave ever tried. I have now been using it for three months and am experiencing no trouble from Catarrh whatever. I have been a sufferer for twenty years, C. H. Mackey, Mgouruey, lowa, xea. zz, '8 A baliheadbd man, who has heard the. hairs of a man's head are numb. wants to know if there is not souv , whore he. can obtain the back numbeboUne will supply the demand. " ' 't n. 'Hi i ..Hi ..i If a cough disturbs your Blee Cure tor Consumption and rer
M
A
V I
Rescued from Death. William J. Cougblia, of Somerville, Mass., says: In the fall of 1876 I iwa taken with bleeding of lungs, followed by a severe coughI lost my appetite and flesh, and was confined to my bed. In 1877 I was admitted to the hospital. The doctors said I had a hole in my lung as big as a half dollar. At .one time a report wont around that I was dead. I gave up hope, but a friend told me of Dr. Wnv Hall's llalsam for the Lungs. I got a bottle when, to my surprise, T commenced to fee better, and to-day I feel better than for three years past. "Pat up" at the Gault House. The business man or tourist will find firstclass accommodations at the low price of 98 and $3.50 per day at the Gault House, Chicago, corner Clinton and Madison streets. This far-famed hotel is located in tho center of the city, only one block from the Union Depot, Elevator; all appointments first-class. H. W. Hovt, Proprietor. Universally Approved. J. A. Rogers, M. D., of Kenton, Ohio, says: I must say Warnei-'s White Wine of Tai Syrup has been universally approved by my customers: hover hear any complaints about It here; sold it for years. . Puke Cod-liver oil, made from selected livers on the sea-shore, by Caswehu, Hazabo & Co., New Yprk. It is absolutely pure tend sweet. Patients who have once taken it prefer it to all others. Physicians have decided it superior to any of the other oils in market, . - Pou three wint?r i I have bean afflicted witu Catarrh and Cold in the Head. I used Ely's Cream Rahn; it. accomplished all that; was represented. T. P. McCormick (Judre Common Pleas), Elizabeth, N. J. (Price 60 cents.) Chaffed Hands, Face, Pimples, and routrn Skin, cured by using Jumper Tab Soap, made by Caswell, Hazard & Co.. Haw York. First effectual, then good to take, then cheap Piso's Cure for Consumption.
CURES. , Rheumatism, Neuralgia, Sciatica, Lumbago, Backache. Headache, tathache, , ore TIi rot, Nwcl I i it am. Npral iisBraUesa, llurns. Mcail. frost Bile, AKD iU wTHKK BOKII-Y PaIKS AKD Afwa, old by Druetiits and DealeraeTerrwhere. Fifty CeotVotae. mrotlomlun Ungiiafoa, THE CHAHXES A. VOCE1.KK CO. , ta A. VOUKUaU a L'U.) ajuuana, (CQIHjUEROR.) A SPECIFIC FOR EPILEPSY. SPASMS, CONVULSIONS, FILLING SICKNESS, ST. VITUS DANCE. ALCHOHOLISH, j OPIUM E-TlHfi, 1 SCROFULA, KINGS EVIL 1 UGLY BLOOD DISEASES. DYSPEPSIA, MOUSHESS, SICK HEADACHE, SHEUMATISH. NERVOUS WEAKNESS NERVOUS PROSTRATION, BRAIN WORRY, BLOOD SORES; BILIOUSNESS, COSTIVENESS, KIOHEY TROUBLES AND IRREGULARITIES. 1.50 per bottle.' For tefltknonlalff and circulars send stamp. The Dr. S. A. Richmond Med, Co., Props., t, Tcseplv, Mo. (11) Correspondence freely answered by Physicians. Sold by all Drec-rista THE FIRESIDE, TVIstrirnonial Paper. SanBle.ttte. FIRESIDE PUB'G CO., Newton Upper Falls, Mass. AGENTS WANTED for the best and f asteist-sellina Pictorial Books nni UiuleH. Prices reduced 3S per cent. National PoncisHniG Oo., Chicago, III. s TEEIv ENGRAVINGS for XMAS or Scran Hook free tor iostajt?. H enntr. Sena to BROWN, Box H. H., PhUadelpMa, Pa. Vo-ti inrr UaM learn Tr.f n bapkt here an4 we will (rivi you a situation. Circulars free. VAUSNTEJE BROS., JaaeBviUe, Wia. PATENTS V0 PATENT, WO PAY! tt. S. & A. P. LAOEY. Patent AifclrriHVK. WllHlliliet-'.n. O.C. Full instructions and Haud-Book oi Pateut sent free. a time aud ihon hnvo ,lim rutnru again, I mean a rail!, cat care. I have niailo the dl.eate of FITS. K!-lL&iSY or FAULISG SICXNES! Hfo-long Btndy. warrammy remedy to cure the worst ens eg. Becauna othora Imvti lallail is no rcaunn ibr not uw receiving a cure. St-iul at once for a treatise and a Km Dottle ut my iiU'nUiliM ro'medy. Olve Express and l-mt Oliice. It wata you uuthlusf-tr a trial, ami I wlllcnro yon. Adilreaa r. U. U. KOOT, 183 Pearl St.. XowTorav tyiii.il i uhv i-ni-ii i ii.i mem merftlvtn Stan tiieai toe Lay the Axe to the Hoot If yoa would desW the cankering worm. -For any external pain, sore, wound or lameness of man or beast, use only MEXICAN MUSTANG LINIMENT. It penetrates all muscle and flesh to the very bone, expelling all inflammation, soreness and pain, and healing the diseased part as no other i-intment ever did or can. So. gaith the experience of two generations of sufferers, and so nill yon say when you have tried the Mtai !
tSaanssnrs
i nilRLC L7IT&!
All xiCcX4r 'MrafSta ftn
Lung A 6000 FAMILY fiEHI THAT WILL CODGHS, COLDS, CROUP: c o ra s u Dr. Meredith, Dentin, of Cincinnati, wns thought to b( In tte tut Uw of CotM-mpt'on and was Induced by hl friend- to try Allen's Lang Balsna after the formula ttm ibown him. Wu have hi lettar that H at onoa cured his couch and that ha was Jenmlah WibU. ot Marios OjMtr, W. Va writ w'tU wife ha4 and.wxs or . . . . i tn Ao osa o7 Alksr-o aoraallMr. Hs writosthat be tad Uastttefaboi think H fee test nxdkiiw n tho Labia to raunno his pracworld. CONSUMPTION. P T I O ra Win. O. Dims, Marchant, of Bowline Gran. Va,, writ- April 4, 1S81, that ha wants as to know that the Lang Balaam fcaa eared his -nothor of Cow saniption. after the physician had tir-m bar up as Incurable. lie says others knowing her ease havo taken the Balsam ami been cured. He thinks all so afflicted should tta trial. Win. A. Graham A Caw WholesafeJ-rns-rista, ZanetrilU, Ohio, wrtie as of the can of Matthtaa Freenun, a wa&-!raom dtiEen, who haul kaesi a. mctoqwiw iseaeiiin m Its wont form, far Mrates) years, tm Uh cured hhn as it hi mn others of flralsi ALLE1TS LDII6 BA1SAD la harmless to the most delioat-t child! It sxtnuuns no Opium in any xorml Recommended bv lfBTalelaaa. MlsdatWa and Savaaau fa fkeft fsw everybody whe hai, glren It a tood Mhl. U ens- Mle to tartaer As an Expectorant it'Iiaa no Equal. SOLD BY ALL MEDICINE DEALERS. $250 A MONTH. Agent Wanted. OO boat gelling articles In the worlu. 1 cample FRBB Address JAY BB03S0K. Benon. Mich. ORGAN AGENTS Wanted In syrery County. RBED'8 TKMPIiB OP MUSIC. 130 State Street, CHICAfSO. rars mtaap nnm ln.WrkMikal . Hslaian. f.aff rtae wu ftaw msM aae It A. L. MITM AtS.. A AgVatate) CUES WHERE All CISf Best Confrh Synm. Tastsngood. Use in time. boio. 1 bydrr-ggistB. .COrJSrJDPTIOL'. WI hi a posttlre remedy for the above diaeaM ; by Ua nm thousands of cases of the wont kind and of foot etandlnr have been cured. Indeed, M-rtroncU my faltS In ita efficacy, that I will rend TWO BOTTLEd Rt taether with a VALL'ABI.K TKKATI8K on this rllanSM.tSi 0 suflorer Clve Kxprern and P. O. address, DR. v. A. SLOCUJU in IHwlBuKewTock. people bare beeopie -rtcat wotklun Tor nsv - We offer -700 a businesswhich is easy to learn one payint yoularge stuns of money in profit. Every one who is wllnne to work ran get rich. Men, women and ewai vapit tl required. e wi.l start yen in the inaineas, ,Yo run no nek whatever. Yon need not be away from home, Ful particulars free W. V. R. POWS, 89 Randolph St., Chicago, Id. A oopy of Bijou editUtvof 01 .p tbPnblfahar. - CHRiSTlrUS m YEAR iU:3. For Babies fSert Our Little Ufe &i WomeD SSSSTHE PANSY For the older tftf fX C Younif Folks 1 lief C Address D. LOTHROP VAKEay Boston, Mass. The Oldest Medicine World cs I probably Dr. Isaac ompson's Uelebrated nils article Is s csrelpBy Bcriptlon. and has been in IVatol century, and notwithstanding ahou-i that have been introdu aa e of this article-is constantly rections are rouowett it wiu n larly invite the attention of pi to ics meriiaw John JL. Thompson, Bona Co., Troy. N. Y CHICAGO TON WAOOH ' A Tola SBO, 94D Ih. r ARMEI a-miacH lite "Little uetecaa os. to ic a-irUCIUST ssj tn ilKlt alEKzlu ?omm, BEST FOKOE atABS 1 AT O A UJisl. OlU. uiin wrwa. 1 40 lb. Am vtl-uael Faraaersaafe fass aaa OKVw4iaa ttUg liSJ-aat. I Blowers. Anvils, Vice Other Artfcisll AT wnm-rtlCB, WH04HAU A Ba-TAIaVJ ABSOLUTELY THE BEST. LIGHTNING Two thoaaand atltches av ost atbaolntely fl-rsf-clnsa Sewli( woria. sent aril r,r i iU. Waurraaki M. Jm-srejnca w asncesi. 'AAaJi; law aaja.sjjta.iAJs: UU., JIU th Hornls p ncld aeeareTy Eagle8too This porous top fi 4'' fcf over r;r'inha tho lSTER F,S IU powor is woridortul In ctiflngdiaeaii.e where! plasters simply roHore. Crifk ln'sho Back and k-3c, fain in tho Sido or Limbs, 6UajaicBand Hnsetetv fi:ino-j-. Trouhloa. Uheumaiism. Nocraljria. Sore CJteseV AfTcctiona of tho Heart and Llrer, and all pains or aehea in nart cured icstantlyby tho flop i?t(i6r. ty "Olt LAME Vk J.'rwe copw or nrsj lor 91,0a, Mailed on irecoijiiof pries. Sold hyf aU'druira-ists aa-l country store. Hop riastc Oontpauif, ) Proprietors, Bostorv lta3S.BACK "H O I 'i' ' t-jT-Kor nnnitinairion. loaa of anaeBts and d!na wn of the bowels Uko Rowley's Sto-nachaad IJtrce nXLx g cents. aasaaatssssaaMBssssassaspaasssaas)assapss CatabrH ey.8 lintAUBALU when appUed by tha Snser into tho nostcils wiheatssiod,eireoftcail4(rir healthy 8crauom.' wauaya mnammation, proax-t tnembrans nsSMaaa a1 ft6naf'colds, yneais.i res to tindi SOT-haV-fever u l -n frA a.mVj Vvit -t-Msail M mtLt B3C.Y BROTHERS. DruKgists, Owesro. N.Y. ir -nrnvv trRITrNfl 1 Iff nlease my you saw Us tntlUspsw-at
MfllW.t 1.A
ietSSanAfTC
mm
KCIC. PitaowT ale., ataav w sowa.
rAiu. 1-1
POOR
r
OB00S
A
1 tne
trn
prehrad physt xmsknt use tea
rSarly thedi-
thtnairy ow anyi rh rn
acreaalnar.
ew tail, wi
luacians
i
akBAsaasA at
laAT al . SVaW -
S..M.1 lis-HL?1 '
TjeEHSiBttW
Mrvr 54.i-rr-'Ss Ejr -"
n HU aaaJTUa.-a UAIIUBIIIX-.-. aW VtM mm 1 U
131 II
Ifl
eases, at As
TrHRf
s t
mm
8UlfJ!A
A few apnllo! relieve. A -e trtatnttnt I i rt.Mn.i.titnfnnlin 1
Hnifl
4i
ABTEBT.
r
